Saturday, March 31, 2012

US seeks coordinated Gulf strategy on Iran, Syria

[ [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Afghan security forces and police killed three', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/H9BcJE', '[Related: Bales\' wife on his alleged shooting: \'He would not do that\']', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['looking for fireworks between the opposing camps', 16]], 'http://yhoo.it/GSvEsj', '[RELATED:\?It?s going to be a circus\?: Activists begin protests outside Supreme Court]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 8]], 'http://yhoo.it/GE6jSh', '[RELATED: Obama\?s health care law passed 2 years ago, but where are we now\?]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Witnesses said the gunman pulled up on a black scooter', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GzwOIW', '[Related: New York police tighten security at Jewish sites]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['test Zimmerman for alcohol or drugs', 11]], 'http://yhoo.it/Gzn6VF', '[Related: White House says Trayvon Martin is local issue]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Trayvon Martin decked the Neighborhood', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GUovUP', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/2/61/261d2c36bccf0971c2734a4d4398aa5a.jpeg', '512', ' ', 'AP/David Goldman', ], [ [['Can you create commerce in order to regulate it', 9]], 'http://yhoo.it/GSgtu8', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/7/78/778e2416573870cd705774e92403447d.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP/Charles Dharapak', ], [ [['associated with such a small earthquake', 4]], 'http://yhoo.it/GTco9z', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/0/b4/0b493c1a47b6e3f97f8f48a2b251d7d4.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP Photo/Carrie Antlfinger', ], [ [['Fox News host Geraldo Rivera sparked outrage', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GKMVTk', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/2/7c/27c7367bc512d233ae1790b320a5e92c.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP Photo/John Minchillo', ], [ [['The charges signed against Bales include', 1]], 'http://yhoo.it/wZT5zV', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/7/a0/7a07c51b2aa0f39b1a23355046d13870.jpeg', '512', ' ', 'AP Photo/DVIDS\, Spc\. Ryan Hallock\, File', ], [ [['George Zimmerman, if I had a son', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/thousands-protest-fla-teen-death-1332387124-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2012/03/22/d761a49f3fcc99080a0f6a70670053cd-jpg_150905.jpg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/John Minchillo', ], [ [['Mohamed Merah', 10], ['prosecutor Francois Molins', 5]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/four-dead-in-french-jewish-school-shooting-1332173151-slideshow', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120321/2012_03_21t151508z_425380421_gm1e83l1sqs01_rtrmadp_3_france_shootings_raid.jpg', '630', ' ', 'REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier', ], [ [['Shortly after he wrapped up his victory remarks', 2]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/4-straight-romney-wins-washington-gop-caucus-1330835515-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/3/e9/3e9b0082c3c3111dcc19e3527ae94cc7.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/Steven Senne', ], [ [['best understands the problems of average Americans', 2]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/4-straight-romney-wins-washington-gop-caucus-1330835515-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/3/e9/3e9b0082c3c3111dcc19e3527ae94cc7.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/Steven Senne', ], [ [['Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GB2RVy', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2012/03/20/photo-1332257995646-4-0-jpg_171722.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AFP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

[ [ [['measure all but certain to fail in the face of bipartisan', 4]], '28771014', '0' ], [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]

rich rodriguez the muppet movie the muppet movie mars rover mars rover trent richardson apple cup

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Payton, Saints have decisions looming this week

[ [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Afghan security forces and police killed three', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/H9BcJE', '[Related: Bales\' wife on his alleged shooting: \'He would not do that\']', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['looking for fireworks between the opposing camps', 16]], 'http://yhoo.it/GSvEsj', '[RELATED:\?It?s going to be a circus\?: Activists begin protests outside Supreme Court]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 8]], 'http://yhoo.it/GE6jSh', '[RELATED: Obama\?s health care law passed 2 years ago, but where are we now\?]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Witnesses said the gunman pulled up on a black scooter', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GzwOIW', '[Related: New York police tighten security at Jewish sites]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['test Zimmerman for alcohol or drugs', 11]], 'http://yhoo.it/Gzn6VF', '[Related: White House says Trayvon Martin is local issue]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Trayvon Martin decked the Neighborhood', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GUovUP', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/2/61/261d2c36bccf0971c2734a4d4398aa5a.jpeg', '512', ' ', 'AP/David Goldman', ], [ [['Can you create commerce in order to regulate it', 9]], 'http://yhoo.it/GSgtu8', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/7/78/778e2416573870cd705774e92403447d.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP/Charles Dharapak', ], [ [['associated with such a small earthquake', 4]], 'http://yhoo.it/GTco9z', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/0/b4/0b493c1a47b6e3f97f8f48a2b251d7d4.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP Photo/Carrie Antlfinger', ], [ [['Fox News host Geraldo Rivera sparked outrage', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GKMVTk', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/2/7c/27c7367bc512d233ae1790b320a5e92c.jpeg', '630', ' ', 'AP Photo/John Minchillo', ], [ [['The charges signed against Bales include', 1]], 'http://yhoo.it/wZT5zV', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/7/a0/7a07c51b2aa0f39b1a23355046d13870.jpeg', '512', ' ', 'AP Photo/DVIDS\, Spc\. Ryan Hallock\, File', ], [ [['George Zimmerman, if I had a son', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/thousands-protest-fla-teen-death-1332387124-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2012/03/22/d761a49f3fcc99080a0f6a70670053cd-jpg_150905.jpg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/John Minchillo', ], [ [['Mohamed Merah', 10], ['prosecutor Francois Molins', 5]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/four-dead-in-french-jewish-school-shooting-1332173151-slideshow', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120321/2012_03_21t151508z_425380421_gm1e83l1sqs01_rtrmadp_3_france_shootings_raid.jpg', '630', ' ', 'REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier', ], [ [['Shortly after he wrapped up his victory remarks', 2]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/4-straight-romney-wins-washington-gop-caucus-1330835515-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/3/e9/3e9b0082c3c3111dcc19e3527ae94cc7.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/Steven Senne', ], [ [['best understands the problems of average Americans', 2]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/4-straight-romney-wins-washington-gop-caucus-1330835515-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/3/e9/3e9b0082c3c3111dcc19e3527ae94cc7.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP Photo/Steven Senne', ], [ [['Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery', 7]], 'http://yhoo.it/GB2RVy', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2012/03/20/photo-1332257995646-4-0-jpg_171722.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AFP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

[ [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/payton-saints-decisions-looming-week-084824835--spt.html

the thin man republic wireless space ball drops on namibia

Education News Roundup: March 26, 2012 ? UtahPublicEducation.org

Gov. Herbert signs the federal lands bill.

Utah State Board of Education Representative Tami Pyfer offers a perspective on the legislative session.

Lone Peak baseball coach resigns following audit.

How rampant is classroom cheating?

????????????????????

TODAY?S HEADLINES

????????????????????

UTAH

Herbert signs bill demanding feds relinquish lands in Utah

Politics ? Legislation seeks state takeover of millions of acres of public lands.

Pyfer: 2012 legislative session was relatively good for education

Study says Utahns? biggest concern is the economy

Audit of Lone Peak baseball led to coach?s resignation

Parents fear more money was raised than is accounted for

Teens compete in robot competition

Hungry kids at Salt Lake City, other Boys & Girls sites seeing smaller snacks

Hunger ? Donations decline as need soars for children who rely on food to tide them over until morning.

Experts offer tips on picking a preschool in Utah

Experts offer tips to parents on finding the right program.

Kindergarten redshirts: What we know about holding back a 5-year-old

BYU Spanish interpreters helping community

Utah school gives to family of girl killed in crosswalk

Tragedy ? Kids, parents, teachers at SLC?s Whittier raise cash for funeral expenses.

Syracuse High School library caught on tape with creative artwork

Students experience culture shock at World Language Fair

Uintah County students, community unite to read for 1 million minutes

RSL players discuss importance of reading

Layton students have fun reading with Road to Success

American Fork students vying for spot in Service Club

Two Davis district students earn perfect ACT score

Morgan establishing simpler district schedule with early-out, late-start changes

School board sets schedule for public use of new facility

Jr. high students sell bracelets to benefit Guatemalan children

Fire crews extinguish flames inside high school gym

Kearns High cleaning up after high CO readings

Teacher asks students to write the F-word in class

Kids coming to University of Utah engineering week

Parowan High School offers study hall

Weber libraries offer help to kids after school

Entries due for entrepreneur award

OPINION & COMMENTARY

Veto the Pledge bill

Short takes on issues

Another canary

Thumbs up, thumbs down

Beehives and Buffalo Chips

Who?s in charge of education in Utah?

Behind The Lines: Sex-ed sound and fury

There is a difference between standing up for oneself and complaining

Yes, kids, get ready to go back to school with earbuds

The scariest sex ed is no sex ed

Utah education: The wrong culprit

The document that defines us

PCE 2012 Legislative Report Card Reflects a Weak Year for Education Innovation and Reform

Most efficient schools

Taking back Utah?s public lands

Replace me with a computer? Part one

Prom from two perspectives ? Her view:

Prom from two perspectives ? His view:

Sex 101

Fed land chimera

Debate team a big commitment

School District Told to Replace Web Filter Blocking Pro-Gay Sites

Study: Math Anxiety Changes Brain Function in Kids

NATION

Cheating our children: Suspicious school test scores across the nation

Latest NCLB Waiver Hopefuls Learned From First Round

Spring break for seniors: community service

In South Korean classrooms, digital textbook revolution meets some resistance

Blackboard makes pair of acquisitions

Children help first lady plant White House garden

????????????????????

UTAH NEWS

????????????????????

Herbert signs bill demanding feds relinquish lands in Utah

Politics ? Legislation seeks state takeover of millions of acres of public lands.

??????? Gov. Gary Herbert signed legislation Friday demanding that Congress turn over roughly 30 million acres of federal land within Utah?s borders ? a move that proponents acknowledge could lead to a court battle.

??????? ?It?s a difficult fight. This is the first step,? said Herbert before signing the measure, ?but it?s a fight worth having.?

??????? Supporters of the effort contend the federal government made a promise to Utah and Western states to dispose of hundreds of millions of acres of federal land, just as it had done in states east of the Rockies.

??????? But it never happened and now Herbert and others say the inability to control federal lands has hampered the state?s economy. Herbert said that the director of the Bureau of Land Management has more control over the state than the governor.

Pyfer: 2012 legislative session was relatively good for education

??????? The Utah legislature was relatively good to public education during its 2012 session. That word from Tami Pyfer, a member of the State Board of Education and candidate for re-election. On KVNU?s Crosstalk show Thursday, Pyfer said there was not a ton of money but there was more money available and the lawmakers were able to fund new growth, something they hadn?t done for the last three years.

??????? ?They did fund the new 12,500 students that will be coming in to our schools this year,? Pyfer said. ?They did give us an increase in the Weighted Pupil Unit, or the WPU.

Study says Utahns? biggest concern is the economy

??????? A new study indicates that the biggest issue on Utahns? minds right now is the economy.

??????? The results of the 2012 Utah Priorities Survey were released on Friday. The survey first ask voters about their worries, then the Utah Foundation compiled the answers, condensed the list of topics and then had others rank their concerns.

??????? Jobs and the economy rank at the top of Utahns? minds. In second place is K-12 education.

A copy of the report

Audit of Lone Peak baseball led to coach?s resignation

Parents fear more money was raised than is accounted for

??????? HIGHLAND ? Mike LaHargoue no longer coaches for Lone Peak High School, but an investigation into how he managed the finances of the school?s baseball program continues nine months after he resigned.

??????? An audit was initiated by the Alpine School District after a group of 10 parents asked for an accounting of money they?d either paid through fees or raised through fundraisers since LaHargoue took over the baseball program in 2008.

??????? LaHargoue is the second successful high school coach to be disciplined over financial discrepancies in recent months. Earlier this month, Timpview High football coach Louis Wong was suspended after an audit raised questions about how the coach managed the Provo high school?s money.

??????? Six parents who spoke to the Deseret News on condition of anonymity said they helped raise $224,000 at Lone Peak High through fundraisers, including a dinner and silent auction.

Teens compete in robot competition

??????? WEST JORDAN, Utah ? Hundreds of teens from around the state got together to learn, create and explore in the name of technology and engineering.

??????? Junior high and middle school students competed in the Technology Student Association? competition on Friday at the Jordan Campus of Salt Lake Community College.

Hungry kids at Salt Lake City, other Boys & Girls sites seeing smaller snacks

Hunger ? Donations decline as need soars for children who rely on food to tide them over until morning.

??????? The elementary kids crowd around the table in the late afternoon to snack on string cheese and juice.

??????? Later, they?ll eat a taco and corn dinner at this Capitol West Boys & Girls Club in Salt Lake City.

??????? With nearly all of them living at or below poverty-level incomes, most of these children don?t eat food at home. Their parents may not have the money to prepare the meals, or they don?t have time if they work more than one job, said club director Maren Miller.

??????? ?Most of our kids do eat school breakfast and lunch, and they eat dinner here,? Miller said. ?We have parents that call and say, ?If you have any leftover food, can you please send some home with the kids????

??????? The dinners are provided through the Utah Food Bank?s Kids Cafe program, which feeds hot meals to children at 29 locations up to five days a week.

??????? And while the food bank also offers food for snacks, it?s harder for this club and others to rely on the program because donations of dry goods to the food bank have dropped.

Experts offer tips on picking a preschool in Utah

Experts offer tips to parents on finding the right program.

??????? Want your toddler to study modern dance? There?s a preschool for that. How about learn Spanish, or celebrate the Jewish High Holy days? There are preschools for those, too.

??????? Utah parents have a dizzying array of options for early childhood education, but what criteria should they use to choose?

??????? ?It will certainly vary depending on the needs of the family and what they are looking to achieve,? said Janis Dubno, early childhood education policy analyst for Voices for Utah Children.

Kindergarten redshirts: What we know about holding back a 5-year-old

??????? The term ?redshirting? originally referred to postponing the start of a college athlete?s participation in games for one year to give him extra time to grow and practice with the team, hopefully improving a player?s skills for future seasons. But college athletes aren?t the only ones who can redshirt.

??????? Academic redshirting refers to postponing entrance into kindergarten for age-eligible children. Much like redshirting in sports, the idea is that holding children back allows extra time for socioemotional, intellectual or physical growth.

BYU Spanish interpreters helping community

??????? PROVO ? At the last census close to 11 percent of Utah County residents were Hispanic, and one group of students at BYU is working to make sure those residents fit in and are understood.

??????? The BYU Spanish Interpreters Club consists of more than 130 members who spend their free time volunteering at schools, churches and hospitals as interpreters for those who need it.

Utah school gives to family of girl killed in crosswalk

Tragedy ? Kids, parents, teachers at SLC?s Whittier raise cash for funeral expenses.

??????? Mindy Tueller started with just one empty mayonnaise jar.

??????? She expected the kids in each class might toss in a few cents to help the family of Ambrosia Amalathithada, the first-grader who was struck and killed by a car as she walked with her mother in a crosswalk near her school last week.

??????? But by the end of the day, Tueller, of the Whittier Elementary PTA, had collected more than $1,500 from teachers, parents and students ? many of whom come from low-income families ? to help the family pay for the girl?s funeral. More than half of the school?s students qualify for free or reduced-price meals.

Syracuse High School library caught on tape with creative artwork

??????? SYRACUSE ? A crowd of life-size three-dimensional figures made of packing tape may be the quietest group ever seen in the Syracuse High School library.

??????? Thirty-six tape sculptures decorate the library. Some lounge about on the stacks reading books, while others snowboard through the bookcases or hang from the ceiling, or even look strikingly similar to Spiderman.

??????? The sculptures are the brainchild of art instructor Dallas Bradbury, who wanted to inspire his students, though he admits he is not the first to create such pieces. He patterned the project after the work of George Segal, an American painter and sculptor known for creating life-size cast figures made of plaster bandages.

Students experience culture shock at World Language Fair

??????? PLEASANT VIEW ? Students across the Top of Utah traveled the world Thursday night. The bonus? They didn?t have to leave the commons area of Weber High School.

??????? More than 2,500 junior high and high school students, along with their families, attended the annual World Language Fair sponsored by Weber School District.

Uintah County students, community unite to read for 1 million minutes

??????? LAPOINT, Uintah County ? The chanting inside the gym at Lapoint Elementary School grew louder and louder Friday as students watched Jessica Wright scrunch up her face, twitch her nose, and flex her jaw muscles.

??????? One Oreo had already slid off the kindergarten teacher?s cheek and hit the floor, barely missing her open mouth. Wright let out a brief squeal, tipped her head back and began working another Oreo from her forehead to her mouth without her hands.

??????? Her successful second attempt at completing the ?Minute to Win It?-inspired contest brought the students to their feet, cheering and clapping as Wright busted out a short celebratory dance.

??????? The contest was one of eight held during a special assembly to reward students, teachers and the community for reaching a goal set by the Lapoint Elementary Parent-Teacher Organization at the start of the school year.

??????? That goal? To read for a total of 1 million minutes.

RSL players discuss importance of reading

??????? SALT LAKE CITY ? It was a very special afternoon at the Dual Immersion Academy (DIA), a bilingual elementary school located in the Glendale neighborhood of Salt Lake City. It was the final day of reading week which concluded with the theme of ?Make reading your goal!?

??????? Two of Real Salt Lake?s newest players, Sebastian Velasquez and Enzo Martinez, visited with the kids to share their favorite books.

Layton students have fun reading with Road to Success

??????? Students and parents at Ellison Park Elementary came to school early this week to read their favorite books together as part of the Road to Success program.

??????? Students who?ve read consistently for the past seven weeks got to pick out a book. The program hopes to get kids interested in reading.

American Fork students vying for spot in Service Club

??????? Service is a way of life for many students at Shelley Elementary School.

??????? The Service Club is four years old and getting bigger. This year there are 80 participants, all from the fifth and sixth grades.

??????? Students apply to be in the club. Adviser Kristin Kukahiko decides who to accept.

Two Davis district students earn perfect ACT score

??????? FARMINGTON ? In the last year, nearly 3,000 students in Davis School District took the ACT, a standards-based test used to assess college readiness.

??????? Two of those students ? Helena Ma, a junior at Davis High School in Kaysville, and Landon Willey, a senior at Viewmont High School in Bountiful ? achieved a score of 36, the highest score possible.

Morgan establishing simpler district schedule with early-out, late-start changes

??????? MORGAN ? The Morgan County School Board has unanimously approved a late start for Morgan High School and Morgan Middle School, as well as an early out for both district elementary schools on Wednesdays starting in the 2012-13 school year.

??????? The move makes way for implementation of Professional Learning Communities, as well as simplified scheduling districtwide.

??????? ?The purpose of these communities is to establish time for teachers and administrators to work together for staff and curriculum development,? said Superintendent Ken Adams.

??????? Schools would be in session for a half-day on late-start, early-out days.

??????? Both elementary schools currently have an early Thursday release, while the middle school has a late Wednesday start. The high school does not have either right now.

School board sets schedule for public use of new facility

??????? MORGAN ? The Morgan County School Board has decided on tentative hours for public use of the new Trojan Century Center when it opens April 15.

??????? ?Let the public in,? board member Neil Carrigan said. ?They are excited.?

??????? The 46,000-square-foot facility features a two-lane rubberized track, a full-sized composite court, a turf field, two classrooms, offices, a conference room and storage areas. The facility will be equipped for basketball, volleyball, tennis, wrestling, badminton, dodge ball, soccer, softball, flag football and track.

Jr. high students sell bracelets to benefit Guatemalan children

??????? SPANISH FORK ? Instead of enjoying a traditional Thanksgiving dinner last year, one Spanish Fork student and her mother were spending their holiday in humanitarian service to the people of Guatemala. Yvonne Bass, 13, and her mother, Anna-Marie, joined the Whiting family and spent 10 days in Guatemala delivering boxes of food and clothing, working in a children?s center and painting a school.

Fire crews extinguish flames inside high school gym

??????? ALTAMONT, Duchesne County ? A high school gym that is scheduled for demolition caught fire Friday in Duchesne County.

??????? Firefighters from Altamont and Roosevelt were called to put out the flames at the old Altamont High School gym. There was no damage to the rest of the school or to the new campus that is going up next door.

Kearns High cleaning up after high CO readings

??????? Unified Fire crews are investigating the cause of high carbon monoxide readings at Kearns High School.

??????? Firefighters received a call at around 12 p.m. Sunday reporting a strange odor at the school. Officials say that when they arrived, they found high carbon monoxide levels in a boiler room and on the roof.

??????? Questar technicians arrived, found a malfunction with some of the equipment and shut that equipment down.

Teacher asks students to write the F-word in class

??????? SALT LAKE CITY ? A teacher used an unusual method to catch the student writing the F-word all over classroom books, desks and equipment.

??????? On Tuesday a second grade teacher at Washington Elementary asked all the boys in her class to write the F-word. The teacher even wrote the F-word on the chalk board for the children to copy.

??????? ?

??????? Even though a representative from the school district has confirmed that the teacher has been reprimanded and feels remorseful, the concerned grandparent feels the teacher should be suspended for her actions.

Kids coming to University of Utah engineering week

??????? SALT LAKE CITY ? The University of Utah is bringing an estimated 2,000 elementary school students to campus to build towers out of drinking straws, construct marshmallow catapults and design clay fish.

??????? The five-day, annual event designed to introduce young students to engineering begins Monday and runs through Friday.

Parowan High School offers study hall

??????? PAROWAN ? Parowan High School announces it now has a study hall to help students. Study hall is available from 6 to 8 p.m. each Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in the Parowan High School library.

Weber libraries offer help to kids after school

??????? OGDEN ? The Weber County Library system offers a free after-school program to help kids learn skills in math, science, technology and crafts.

??????? The program is designed for elementary-aged children and is offered at these locations:

Entries due for entrepreneur award

??????? SANDY ? Utah high school student and high school graduate entrepreneurs are invited to compete for the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards.

??????? Nominations and applications are due Tuesday, and should be submitted through?www.GSEAutah.org.

????????????????????

OPINION & COMMENTARY

????????????????????

Veto the Pledge bill

(Provo) Daily Herald editorial

??????? A bill that ratchets up the frequency of the Pledge of Allegiance for junior high and high school students through a daily ceremony is now before Gov. Gary Herbert. The idea behind SB 223 is that more repetition of the Pledge will stir hearts to greater heights of patriotism.

??????? It won?t work, and the governor should veto the measure.

??????? Under existing law, the Pledge is required daily only in elementary schools and once weekly at junior highs and high schools. That is sufficient, and it?s been working fine.

Short takes on issues

Another canary

Salt Lake Tribune editorial

??????? Utahns for decades have pointed with pride to the accomplishments of their schoolchildren despite the low state investment in education. Legislators boasted that Utah knows how to ?do more with less.? But no more. Now it?s indisputable that Utah schools are doing less with much less. The state?s dead-last rank in state spending per pupil drops even further every year below the investment made by whatever is the next-lowest state. And there is new evidence that the lack of resources is hurting. The Beehive State is among just 10 states where high school graduation rates declined from 2001 to 2009, while the national average rose 3.5 percentage points. Nevertheless, Utah legislative purse strings remain double-knotted against public schools.

Thumbs up, thumbs down

(Ogden) Standard-Examiner editorial

??????? Thumbs down: To the MPPA movie rating agency, which has slapped an ?R? rating on the documentary film, ?Bully,? which provides important information on the bullying, its consequences, and how to prevent it. We need teens to see this important film, and fewer will due to its rating. It needs to be a PG-13.

??????? Thumbs up: To Pleasant View?s Gaitha Butterfield, who does a great job tutoring students at Green Acres Elementary. We applaud all local school tutors, but we?ve singled out Gaitha because we admire the fact she?s doing it as she approaches the century mark in age.

Beehives and Buffalo Chips

(Provo) Daily Herald editorial

??????? Beehive to American Fork?s Dennis Moss, Barratt Elementary School PTA president, who promotes greater involvement of men in the schooling of their children. That doesn?t mean just homework or parent-teacher conferences. He has lots of other ideas to involve men, including tutoring, chaperoning on field trips, leading clubs, volunteering in classrooms, and low-key ideas such as walking to school with the kids or joining them for lunch. If you need an idea, ask Moss.

Who?s in charge of education in Utah?

Deseret News commentary by columnist John Florez

??????? Do we need a state school board? Utah already has 104 legislators running our schools each with their own ideas that change every legislative session. They do as they please with no one to stop them. So, who is in charge of public education and where does the buck stop?

Behind The Lines: Sex-ed sound and fury

Salt Lake Tribune commentary

??????? Welcome to Behind the Lines, a weekly conversation with Salt Lake Tribune cartoonist Pat Bagley and BYU economist Val Lambson.

??????? Lambson: So the governor?s veto of the sex-ed bill means that, at least for now, the debate has been full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. I would rather that policies change systematically in the direction of more liberty ? not just in education, but in everything. That failing, I?ve gotta love gridlock.

??????? Bagley: This wasn?t a debate about nothing. Honest sex education bears directly on the health, safety and well-being of our children.

There is a difference between standing up for oneself and complaining

Deseret News commentary by columnist Amy Donaldson

??????? LEAMINGTON, Millard County ? The story begins with two brothers heading out on a country road for a training run.

??????? Dane and Tyler Nielson live in Leamington, which is about 20 miles from Delta. The teenage twins are competitive, driven and determined ? so understandably, neither wants to be the first to turn and head for home. The boys, who are three-sport athletes at Delta High, continue pushing each other until they have traversed the 20 miles from their hometown to the high school track where they compete each spring.

??????? Once there, they decide they are so close to the 26.2 miles required by a marathon, they jog to the track and finish their own personal race.

??????? It?s a story that has become legend among Delta residents who repeat it as an anecdote about how tough the residents of this tight-knit community are.

??????? Tyler Nielson confirms it isn?t true. It is something the brothers have discussed, maybe even something they?ll attempt. But the truth of the story doesn?t matter to those who call Millard County home.

Yes, kids, get ready to go back to school with earbuds

(Ogden) Standard-Examiner commentary by columnist Mark Saal

??????? Today?s column is specifically written for you younger, school-age readers in the 11th grade or below. And you might want to sit down for this next part:

??????? Hey, kids! So, how was your summer? Ready to hit the books again?

??????? No?

??????? Well, you?d better get ready. Because here at the Standard-Examiner, believe it or not, we?ve already received our first back-to-school advertisement rumblings.

The scariest sex ed is no sex ed

Salt Lake Tribune op-ed by George Chapman, a retired engineer and a delegate to the Salt Lake County Republican convention

??????? A week ago in this section, Sutherland Institute president Paul Mero defended HB363, the non-sex education bill that the Legislature passed and the governor vetoed. Mero claimed that the bill was ?the only just, rational and consistent way to influence the choices of youth in public schools about proper and healthy sexual relations.?

??????? Even if students did not exist in a world of easy access and fascination with Internet porn, R-rated cable TV and films and contraception, the argument by the bill?s backers seems to be that ignorance about sex is bliss.

??????? Tens of thousands of Utah parents rejected that notion, pressuring the governor to veto the legislation, which would have allowed public school districts to drop all sex education, or to offer abstinence-only instruction and nothing more.

Utah education: The wrong culprit

Salt Lake Tribune op-ed by David Garbett, a staff attorney with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance

??????? The Utah Legislature passed a bill demanding that the federal government transfer all federal lands to the state ? with a few exceptions, such as national parks and designated wilderness areas.

??????? If this misguided effort were successful, Utahns could one day see ?No Trespassing? signs or the scars of mineral development on some of their favorite public lands.

??????? None of the arguments for this brazen attack holds water on closer examination. Even the Legislature?s own lawyers dubbed the escapade almost certainly unconstitutional.

??????? Despite the claims of HB148?s Republican sponsor, Rep. Ken Ivory, Utah was never ?promised? at statehood that the federal government would sell all land within the state?s borders.

??????? In fact, the Utah Constitution says in no uncertain terms that we ?forever disclaim all right and title to the unappropriated public lands lying within the boundaries hereof.?

The document that defines us

Salt Lake Tribune op-ed by Kip Sayre, a retired Utah high school teacher of American government and debate

??????? As a high school teacher of government, history and debate, I used to begin each semester by asking my students to describe an American. It didn?t take long for them to realize that a physical description of an American is impossible.

??????? They eventually came to realize that an American is not a person as much as an idea. I would spend the rest of the semester helping them learn about this ?idea? called an American.

??????? They already knew we are the most powerful nation on Earth. But why do our economy and culture seem to work so well? When I suggested the difference between us and the rest of the world is our Constitution, I got a lot of raised eyebrows. After all, how can a mere document make such a difference?

??????? It is clear that too many Americans have no understanding of the importance of the U.S. Constitution. Most know we have one but very few have read it.

PCE 2012 Legislative Report Card Reflects a Weak Year for Education Innovation and Reform

Parents for Choice in Education commentary

??????? Parents for Choice in Education?s newly released 2012 Legislative Report Card reflects that little got done to innovate or reform Utah?s public school system this year. While multiple states across the nation have recently enacted bold school choice policies and education reform measures, here in Utah we clung to the status quo this session. Perhaps it was the fact that it is an election year. Perhaps it was the influence of a teacher?s union fearful of the major union reforms sweeping the nation and still stinging from the monumental, student-centric policy victories last year such as School Grading, Statewide Online Education Program, annual evaluations for all teachers, and the end of taxpayers paying union employee salaries through the reform of District Leave Policies.

??????? Noticeably absent from PCE?s report card is Senate Bill 64. A curious omission on the surface, but not once the covers are peeled back unveiling the realities of this so-called ?collaborative? legislation.

A copy of the report card

Most efficient schools

Commentary by Charter Solutions President Lincoln Fillmore

??????? This is the first post in a series analyzing the financial data of charter schools.

??????? Schools have to spend money on administration, even though none of them have administration as one of the goals of their charter.? But, like janitorial work, administration is something that has to be done?for compliance, efficiency, and a consistent vision.

??????? The premise of this post is that the schools that run effectively that spend the least on administration are the most efficient schools.

??????? Using data from schools? Annual Financial Reports and the Superintendent?s Annual Report, I analyzed spending on the administrative functions of each charter school on a per student basis.? The findings are interesting, if you?re a little nerd like me.

Taking back Utah?s public lands

Sutherland Institute commentary by Alexis Young, multimedia reporter

??????? Governor Gary Herbert has signed HB 148, a bill aimed at restoring public lands to Utah for the benefit of public schools throughout the state. Watch this video report to learn more about what this bill would mean for Utah; it includes interviews with Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), Representative Rob Bishop (R-Utah), Representative Ken Ivory (R-West Jordan), and Stan Rasmussen, Sutherland Institute?s director of public affairs:

Replace me with a computer? Part one

Deseret News commentary by columnist Mary McConnell

??????? One of the pleasures of blogging is the excuse it gives me to free associate. This morning three strands of personal experience and reflection wove together in my mind.

??????? The first strand was a friendly jab from one of my frequent commentators/contributors, who knows that I am (guardedly) enthusiastic about the potential of online learning.

Prom from two perspectives ? Her view:

(Ogden) Standard-Examiner commentary by Allison Foster, a senior at Fremont High School

??????? Wake Up: A smile spreads across your face as you realize today?s the day.

??????? Day Date Prep: Here?s the trick, you want to look as nice as you can without going all out, because you want to save the wow factor for tonight.

Prom from two perspectives ? His view:

(Ogden) Standard-Examiner commentary by Robert Stewart, a senior at Fremont High School

??????? Night Before Prom: Hang out with a ton of friends and maybe go to a few parties. The one rule about Prom is you?ve got to start the party before the party starts.

??????? Morning: Wake up for the day date and think to yourself, ?Why did I ever sign up for this??

Sex 101

Salt Lake Tribune letter from Stephanie Christian

??????? It is important to have comprehensive sex education classes in our schools. I know teens who already have a sexually transmitted disease. Nevertheless, parents need to decide what is important for schools to teach their children.

??????? I think it is OK for schools to teach about the reproductive system in males and females, as well as what contraceptives are and how to use them to prevent unwanted pregnancy and diseases. Clearly, this type of information is needed, and teachers can provide it so students can make educated decisions.

??????? However, if ?comprehensive sex education? has to include teaching about homosexuality, etc., then do we also include information on being bisexual and transgender and information on incest, rape, sexual abuse, morals and warnings to beware of people who say they are sterile just so you will have sex with them? The list could go on and on.

??????? Should we expect teachers to teach everything there is to know about sex? No.

Fed land chimera

Salt Lake Tribune letter from JC Smith

??????? We know that two-thirds of our state is owned by the feds, and some people keep telling us that?s the reason we have such a horribly underfunded education system. After all, half our taxes go to pay for schools. If we could only develop all that land the feds owe us, we could be like North Dakota. (Does anyone really want that?)

??????? OK, time for truth telling. We don?t give adequate support to schools for two reasons. First, we don?t pay enough taxes. Believe it or not, lots of states pay more than we do, and other states with large federal land holdings give decent support to schools. Second, we have too many kids per taxpayer, and we grant exemptions for each kid, so those with the most kids pay the least taxes.

Debate team a big commitment

(Logan) Herald Journal letter from Linda Gillespie

??????? Thanks for the article recently about the Sky View debate team?s win for the 10th year in a row. I would like to share some further information about the team and what goes on ?behind the scenes.?

School District Told to Replace Web Filter Blocking Pro-Gay Sites

New York Times commentary by columnist MICHAEL WINERIP

??????? CAMDENTON, Mo. ? Students using the computers at Camdenton High School here in central Missouri have been able to access the Web sites for Exodus International, as well as People Can Change, antigay organizations that counsel men and women on how to become heterosexual.

??????? But the students have not been able to access the Web sites of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, or the Gay-Straight Alliance Network.

??????? They have been able to read Bowers v. Hardwick, the 1986 Supreme Court ruling that upheld a Georgia statute criminalizing sodomy. But they have been blocked from reading Lawrence v. Texas, the 2003 Supreme Court ruling that held that laws criminalizing sodomy were unconstitutional.

??????? They have been given access to scores of antigay sites, but not to those supportive of gay people.

??????? A clear-cut case of censorship?

??????? Actually, not so clear.

??????? It does not appear that the school superintendent or the librarians or board members or the district Web master made these decisions.

??????? Instead, the district?s Web filter determined which sites would be open to students and which would be blocked.

Study: Math Anxiety Changes Brain Function in Kids

Education Week commentary by columnist Julie Rasicot

??????? Those of us who aren?t that confident when it comes to math know well that feeling of anxiety when faced with a problem requiring complex calculations.

??????? That anxiety, it turns out, is more than just a case of jitters. A new study by a team of scientists at Stanford University?s School of Medicine shows that the brain function of young elementary school kids who suffer from math anxiety differs from those who don?t, according to a report on the university?s website.

????????????????????-

NATIONAL NEWS

????????????????????-

Cheating our children: Suspicious school test scores across the nation

Atlanta Journal-Constitution

??????? Suspicious test scores in roughly 200 school districts resemble those that entangled Atlanta in the biggest cheating scandal in American history, an investigation by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution shows.

??????? The newspaper analyzed test results for 69,000 public schools and found high concentrations of suspect math or reading scores in school systems from coast to coast. The findings represent an unprecedented examination of the integrity of school testing.

??????? The analysis doesn?t prove cheating. But it reveals that test scores in hundreds of cities followed a pattern that, in Atlanta, indicated cheating in multiple schools.

Latest NCLB Waiver Hopefuls Learned From First Round

Education Week

??????? In the latest round of applications for waivers under the No Child Left Behind Act, states seem to have learned lessons from their predecessors and dodged pitfalls that triggered some big revisions from first-round states.

??????? The second-round group of 26 states, plus the District of Columbia, did a better job explaining how they will help English-learners and special education students succeed. And they are not straying as far from the 2002 law?s original emphasis on holding schools accountable for the performance of small groups of students deemed at risk.

??????? Yet the new applicants still have a lot of work to do to create new and more sophisticated accountability systems, an Education Week analysis of their applications suggests.

Spring break for seniors: community service

Washington Post

??????? The pressure is on. With weeks slipping by until senior year ends, Bianca Rodriguez is making a final push to complete the graduation requirement she overlooked for most of high school: community service.

??????? The teenager is only about halfway done with her required 75 service hours ? one of thousands of high school seniors in Maryland and the District being encouraged, prodded and flat-out nagged to find a place to volunteer. To finish up. Now.

In South Korean classrooms, digital textbook revolution meets some resistance

Washington Post

??????? SEOUL ? Five years ago, South Korea mapped out a plan to transform its education system into the world?s most cutting-edge. The country would turn itself into a ?knowledge powerhouse,? one government report declared, breeding students ?equipped for the future.? These students would have little use for the bulky textbooks familiar to their parents. Their textbooks would be digital, accessible on any screen of their choosing. Their backpacks would be much lighter.

??????? By setting out to swap traditional textbooks for digital ones, the chief element of its plan for transformation, South Korea tried to anticipate the future ? and its vision has largely taken shape with the global surge of tablets, smartphones and e-book readers.

??????? But South Korea, among the world?s most wired nations, has also seen its plan to digitize elementary, middle and high school classrooms by 2015 collide with a trend it didn?t anticipate: Education leaders here worry that digital devices are too pervasive and that this young generation of tablet-carrying, smartphone-obsessed students might benefit from less exposure to gadgets, not more.

??????? Those concerns have caused South Korea to pin back the ambition of the project, which is in a trial stage at about 50 schools. Now, the full rollout won?t be a revolution: Classes will use digital textbooks alongside paper textbooks, not instead of them. First- and second-graders, government officials say, probably won?t use the gadgets at all.

Blackboard makes pair of acquisitions

Washington Post

??????? District-based Blackboard finalized a pair of acquisitions today that will allow the education software maker to provide technical and customer support to schools that use open-source software instead of its own products.

??????? The announcement reflects a shift in strategy for Blackboard away from simply generating money through the sale of its software, which many secondary schools and colleges use to augment classroom instruction.

??????? Now the company will provide services to assist schools that use ?open-source? products, which are typically free and serve as competitors to Blackboard?s software. A new division at the company called Blackboard Education Open Source Services will oversee the new line of business.

Children help first lady plant White House garden

Associated Press

??????? WASHINGTON ? Michelle Obama is harvesting vegetables and plants at the White House with children from across the country for the first time.

??????? The first lady was helped by school children from New York, Pennsylvania and North Carolina in planting potatoes, spinach, broccoli, carrots, radishes and onions at her fourth annual spring planting. Children from Washington-area schools, who have helped in previous years, also joined in the harvest of the White House Kitchen Garden.

??????? It is the first vegetable garden at the executive mansion since Eleanor Roosevelt?s Victory Garden.

Source: http://utahpubliceducation.org/2012/03/26/education-news-roundup-march-26-2012/

verdict in michael jackson trial brian urlacher dr conrad murray verdict take care childish gambino camp drake take care tracklist drake take care tracklist

Monday, March 26, 2012

"Titanic" director makes first solo dive to Earth's deepest point

Sun Mar 25, 2012 10:25pm EDT

(Reuters) - "Titanic" film director James Cameron has completed the world's first solo dive to the deepest known point on Earth, reaching the bottom of the Pacific Ocean's Mariana Trench southwest of Guam in a specially designed submarine.

The filmmaker arrived at the site known as "Challenger Deep" shortly before 8 a.m. local time Monday (6 p.m. EDT on Sunday), reaching a depth of 35,756 feet, or roughly 7 miles beneath the ocean's surface, said the National Geographic Society, which is overseeing the expedition.

Cameron's first words to the surface upon reaching the bottom were, "All systems OK," National Geographic said on its website.

"Hitting bottom never felt so good. Can't wait to share what I'm seeing w/ you," the filmmaker said in a separate Twitter message posted just after he touched down.

The low-point of the Mariana Trench, a great valley below the Pacific, has been reached by humans just once before, in 1960 when U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh and Swiss oceanographer Jacques Piccard spent 20 minutes there in the bathyscaphe Trieste.

Cameron, the first to make a solo dive to the spot, planned to spend six hours there collecting research samples for marine biology and geology.

The expedition is a joint project by Cameron, National Geographic and watchmaker Rolex that has been dubbed "Deepsea Challenge" and is designed to expand understanding of a little-known corner of the Earth.

The single-man vehicle piloted by Cameron, the Deepsea Challenger, stands 24 feet tall and was designed to descend upright and rotating at a speed of about 500 feet per minute.

The submersible represents breakthroughs in materials science, structural engineering and imaging through an ultra-small, full-ocean depth-rated stereoscopic camera.

While he is perhaps better known as director of such films as "Titanic," "Avatar" and "Aliens," Cameron is no stranger to underwater exploration. For "Titanic," he took 12 dives to the famed shipwreck in the North Atlantic, leading him to develop deep-sea film and exploration technology.

Since then he has led six expeditions, authored a forensic study of the German battleship Bismarck wreck site and conducted extensive 3-D imaging of deep hydrothermal vents along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the East Pacific Rise and the Sea of Cortez.

(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by David Bailey and Stacey Joyce)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/aWuG12Kj0Bo/us-usa-deepsea-cameron-idUSBRE82P01D20120326

best cyber monday deals cyber monday

Sunday, March 25, 2012

New Surgical Tool Aids Doctors | Prostate Cancer Survivors Speak ...

A new ? revolutionary ?surgical tool was used for the first time in Britain in the performance of an open radical prostatectomy.? The instrument is a hand-held robot that moves in multiple directions to operate in areas that are difficult to? approach.? The device is called the Kymerax precision-drive articulating system and was developed by the Japanese Teurmo Corporation.

The Terumo robot reportedly provides greater flexibility than the human wrist, allowing more precise stitching for better recovery.? The operation was performed at Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport, in Greater Manchester, England.

The lead surgeon, Dr. Neil Oakley, said it was ?an honor to be the first in Britain to carry out a prostatectomy using this device?It?s the fusion of maintaining the feel and touch during an operation with the greater robotic articulation that makes it so special.?

The hospital said it will enable more surgeons to quickly achieve the highest possible standards, not only in prostate surgery but also gynaecology, urology and gastrointestinal surgery.

The initial surgery using the Kymerax robot was performed on March 23, 2012 on a 52 year old structural engineer from Cheadle Hulme, Stuart Ellis.? Mr. Ellis commented, ? Being told you?ve been diagnosed with cancer is not a pleasant experience, but it?s good to know something positive for other people is coming out of this.?

The motorized? hand-held surgical instrument costs around 95% less than current larger robots used over the last few years to perform laparoscopic procedures.

Source: http://www.prostatecancersurvivorspeak.com/new-surgical-tool-aids-doctors/

schweddy balls schweddy balls bill conlin kendall jenner plane crash plane crash kardashian christmas card

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Batteries and Titanium the Focus of New Funding at Dalhousie University

The Automotive Partnership Canada (APC) initiative has provided funding to projects at Dalhousie that will "build a better battery" and create ways for Titanium to be more cost-effective and in turn see increased use in the automotive industry, reducing vehicle weight and improving fuel economy. Dalhousie University received over $6 million for two research projects.

Dr. Jeff Dahn has received $4.1 million to advance the performance of lithium-ion batteries. His research centres on developing long-lasting Lithium-ion batteries, which are rechargeable and that can store around twice the energy of traditional batteries. Dr. Stephen Corbin has been granted $2.2 million to develop less expensive titanium parts for vehicles. Replacing steel with titanium alternatives reduces the weight of a vehicle by 50 percent, thus decreasing the costs of production of vehicles. These projects will be supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) and the National Research Council of Canada (NRC).

Key Points:

  • Jeff Dahn's project will seek to find ways to improve the life of lithium-ion batteries. These batteries, when used for cars, must meet more stringent requirements than those for portable electronics. They must last for 10 years, sustain over 3,000 charge/discharge cycles and withstand extremes of temperature. Batteries for grid energy storage and medical devices have similar requirements. A major goal of Dahn's project is to rapidly identify those cell chemistries and operating ranges that give optimum battery cycle and calendar life. The funding will help enable the creation of three state-of-the-art labs to further Dahn's work.
  • ?
  • A suite of advanced diagonistic equipment is being added to the existing battery R+D capacity at Dalhousie to aid in the rapid development of long-lived, low-cost, high-energy Li-ion batteries for Automotive, Medical and Grid Energy Applications. The partners come from non-competing sectors so collaboration can occur: 3M is a Battery materials maker; Magna makes automotive Li-ion Batteries; Medtronic makes and uses Li-ion batteries for medical applications; GM makes electrified vehicles and NS Power is an electric utility interested in battery storage.
  • ?
  • The cornerstone of the application is the first Ultra High Precision Battery Charger in the world capable of measuring the difference between the charge stored and delivered by Li-ion batteries of any size to a precision of 10 parts per million. Lithium-ion batteries would last forever if this difference is exactly zero, so accurately detecting and minimizing this difference, by making changes to battery chemistry, will lead the way to batteries that will last decades.
  • ?
  • Engineering professor Steve Corbin is looking into ways to develop a more cost effective Titanium. Titanium (Ti) is as strong as many steels yet 45% lighter. It can be used to make exhaust systems, engine valves and other automotive parts that will last a vehicle?s lifetime. A team of researchers from Dalhousie, Queen's and the University of Waterloo, in partnership with two Ontario companies: Wescast Industries of Brantford and Kingston Process Metallurgy (KPM) aim to develop made-in-Canada technologies capable of producing Ti parts at a reduced cost. Reducing the cost of Ti will allow its increased use in the automotive industry, reducing vehicle weight and improving fuel economy.
  • ?
  • APC is a five-year $145 million federal initiative launched in 2009 that supports collaborative research and development (R&D) activities of benefit to the entire Canadian automotive industry. It is a partnership among five federal research and granting organizations within the portfolio of Industry Canada: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), National Research Council (NRC), Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), and Canada Excellence Research Chairs program. A key guiding principle of APC is that all projects (or programs of research) to be funded within this initiative must be driven by industry needs and must have active industrial participation and collaboration. In addition to the APC funding, the Nova Scotia Research and Innovation Trust (NSRIT) will be providing $1,825,526 funding for Dr. Dahn's project.

Source: http://www.labmanager.com/?articles.view/articleNo/7195/article/Batteries-and-Titanium-the-Focus-of-New-Funding-at-Dalhousie-University

occupy rose parade vesta williams stanford stanford oklahoma state university badgers badgers

Friday, March 23, 2012

How Streamlining Business Technology Can Increase Productivity ...

When most people think about streamlining in the manufacturing industry, their thoughts turn to equipment and staffing rather than business technology. Sometimes, though, adjusting internal processes on the office end can translate to increased productivity for every aspect of the business.

American Cast Iron Pipe Company (ACIPCO) discovered this when they detected an internal slowdown, and Innovative Architects showed them how the Microsoft.Net Framework could help.

Like many companies in the manufacturing industry, ACIPCO maintains a large and ever-changing intranet and knowledge base for employees at every level. Previously, the IT department oversaw maintenance of this content. They were responsible for receiving new or updated documents, editing them and loading them onto the company?s intranet.

Because several individuals were handling these duties with no unifying framework, it was difficult for the IT staff to detect duplicate content or even establish a naming convention for files. The result was a confusing system with a server full of documents that were misnamed, outdated and very challenging to navigate.

Maintaining this system was also incredibly time-consuming for members of the IT department. Hours that they could have spent making improvements to the office infrastructure were instead devoted to editing, formatting and uploading documents created by users in other departments.

Innovative Architects Helped ACIPCO Find the Right Business Technology Solutions

When Innovative Architects took a look at ACIPCO?s situation, the Microsoft.Net suite of applications seemed to offer the obvious solution. Rather than funneling every piece of documentation through the IT department, employees with knowledge to contribute could instead be empowered to update the intranet themselves, and this could even be accomplished without intensive computer training.

Today, ACIPCO employees can access templates and create documents in Microsoft Office, then share them on the company?s intranet via Microsoft SQL Server, Microsoft Office SharePoint server and the Microsoft.Net Framework. Not only has this opened up the IT department to focus on other aspects of business technology, but it has also created an organized platform where documents are easy to find and kept up-to-date by those in relevant departments, who better understand each individual piece of documentation.

When thinking about increasing productivity in the manufacturing industry, internal content management may not be the first upgrade that comes to mind, but the ripple effect of an updated IT infrastructure reaches every corner of any business. With the IT department freed up to perform IT tasks and the remaining departments empowered to share their knowledge and information, increased productivity is the inevitable result.

If you think your company could benefit from a more streamlined infrastructure, contact Microsoft business technology consultants at Innovative Architects today to learn how we can help.

?

Source: http://www.blog.innovativearchitects.com/microsoft-business-solutions/how-streamlining-business-technology-can-increase-productivity.htm

jewel san francisco earthquake san francisco earthquake terminator salvation terminator salvation jarhead montrose

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Car Insurance ? A Necessary Precaution | Articles of car, motor, auto ...

Many drivers in America simply take for granted the fact that they have car insurance; in fact, it is usually required for all automobiles on the road to have one of two types of insurance: liability or full coverage. Liability car insurance is the coverage that only protects the other driver and their property in the case of an accident. Full coverage will protect the other auto and your own as well. Although insurance requirements may vary from state to state, many people must have full coverage if they are still making payments on a vehicle, and can only get liability if it is paid for.

There are many types of scenarios that would render auto insurance necessary. Of course, an automobile accident is the primary reason you should have car insurance. The cost of a buying a new replacement vehicle is usually very pricey, and not many people can afford to run right out and buy a new car if they get theirs damaged in an accident. Fortunately, often full coverage will provide the cost of replacing the damaged vehicle. Liability will not have this option. In addition, liability will not cover the cost of replacing a vehicle if you hit a tree or deer.

It is not only ill advised and often expensive, but, in some states, actually illegal to drive without insurance. If you are caught without insurance, you can face a hefty fine or even jail time. Since car insurance is so very necessary, you need to find insurance that you can afford. Often you will have a deductable and a monthly payment. The deductable is the amount that you must pay in the case of damage to the vehicle, before insurance will cover the rest. The monthly payments are to cover the premiums of having the vehicle insured and will vary widely.

Typically, car insurance will be much more costly for drivers with a bad driving history, those who are male, and those who are under the age of 25. In these cases, the premiums are likely to be fairly steep, and you may need to shop around for a low monthly payment. However, if you have none of these issues, you may be able to get a lowered deductable, which means insurance will cover more, and you may also be able to get points for being a good driver, and thus have lower monthly payments. Always get a quote before you sign any papers.

Tags: auto insurance, car insurance, car insurance tips, motor insurance, vehicle insurance

Source: http://articles-of-insurance.com/car-motor-auto-automobile-vehicle-motorbike-bike-boat-insurance/car-insurance-a-necessary-precaution/

day light savings spring forward daylight saving time 2012 grapes of wrath silent house greta van susteren nfl mock draft

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Oprah Winfrey's OWN network axes 'The Rosie Show'

FILE - In this April 13, 2008 file photo, comedian Rosie O'Donnell arrives at Comedy Central's "Night of Too Many Stars" special, benefiting autism education at The Beacon Theatre in New York. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, file)

FILE - In this April 13, 2008 file photo, comedian Rosie O'Donnell arrives at Comedy Central's "Night of Too Many Stars" special, benefiting autism education at The Beacon Theatre in New York. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, file)

(AP) ? Oprah Winfrey's OWN network is pulling the curtain on "The Rosie Show" after five months on the air.

The show premiered in October to about 500,000 viewers but lost about half that audience within days of its debut.

Recently, it changed the format from taping before a studio audience to a one-on-one interview setting with celebrities such as Kathy Griffin, Chelsea Handler and former Illinois first lady Patti Blagojevich.

In a statement released by OWN, Winfrey thanked O'Donnell. She called O'Donnell "an incredible partner" who worked to put on the best show "every single day."

O'Donnell also was quoted as saying she loved working with Winfrey and in Chicago and "wished" the show had better ratings.

The final episode will air March 30.

___

Online:

http://www.oprah.com/rosie/rosie.html

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-03-16-People-Rosie%20O'Donnell/id-7781c444deaf418eb40250753724f3e8

widespread panic richard stallman richard stallman williston north dakota williston north dakota kody brown transylvania

residential care home, residential care - Learn management with ...











Elder care is a result of proper management. You can't complete this responsibility without an appropriate plan. You need to include or think about lots of things like elder's routine, habits, medications etc. There is a specific term which is used for elder care management that is Geriatric care management. This term gives a perfect definition to the elder's care. According to this elder care management is a process of planning and coordinating care of the elderly. These plans are also effective for the elder's, who are physically and mentally not fit. Through these you can provide them long term and independent care. The term geriatrics came from the Greek.

Residential care homes say that these management plans are executed by Geriatric care managers, they are aware with the issues regarding management plan. To make them good and efficient managers include members of family, friends and social care providers. In residential care homes you can find a staff which work according to your connivance. They give you best services according to your health requirement. Residential care homes bring care for elders or senior citizens and oversight of a living facility in the home like environment. There are so many care homes are available but in these homes, caregivers rent out rooms to elders, who take care of them. Staff of these care Homes gives every possible support to the elders like they cook for them, help them in daily routine, take care about their medicines, doctor's appointment etc.

Geriatric manager involve his own knowledge regarding health even if he have any kind of doubt, then he include psychologist and skilled doctors in it. Managers also give advice about public and private resources, funding throughout the care. These managers also assist families, if their elderly are suffering from diseases like Alzheimer, dementia, Parkinson disease. Dementia is a disease, which affects your elder's memory. Dementia is a loss of brain function that occurs with certain diseases. It affects memory, thinking, language, judgment, and behavior. The rate of death due to this disease is very fast, patient will die within two to ten years.

In other words geriatric take care about elder's health. It aims to promote health by preventing and treating diseases and disabilities in older adults. Geriatrician doesn't defined age for the patient. At any stage of life you can take their help. This is the decision of individual patient, whether they want them or not. Geriatricians distinguish between diseases and the effects of normal ageing.

Author loves to write articles on various informational topics and this topic is based on residential care homes

Keywords: Care home, care homes, residential care home, residential care home uk, residential care homes, residential care homes UK

This article has been viewed 26 time(s).

It is a violation of our terms and conditions for writers to submit material which they did not write and claim it as their own. If this article infringes on your copyrights, you MUST either call us at 706-866-2295 or send proof of infringement along with the offending article's title, URL, and writer name to

IdeaMarketers.com
Attn: Marnie Pehrson - Copyright Concern
514 Old Hickory Ln
Ringgold GA 30736 USA
If you email us or use our problem submission form, we CANNOT guarantee we'll receive your notice!

Source: http://www.ideamarketers.com/?articleid=3080677

joey lawrence loma prieta loma prieta harold camping kim kardashian and kris humphries kim kardashian and kris humphries chris morris

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Possible new human species unearthed in China

Scientists in China have found what may be a new species of human. Fossils show a group of people with similarities to and differences from modern humans.

Mysterious fossils of what may be a previously unknown type of human have been uncovered in caves in China, ones that possess a highly unusual mix of bygone and modern human features, scientists reveal.

Skip to next paragraph

Surprisingly, the fossils are only between 11,500 and 14,500 years old. That means they would have shared the landscape with modern humans when China's earliest farmers were first appearing.

"These new fossils might be of a previously unknown species, one that survived until the very end of the ice age around 11,000 years ago," said researcher Darren Curnoe, a palaeoanthropologist at the University of New South Wales in Australia.

"Alternatively, they might represent a very early and previously unknown migration of modern humans out of Africa, a population who may not have contributed genetically to living people," Curnoe added.

The skeletons

At least three fossil specimens were uncovered in 1989 by miners quarrying limestone at Maludong or Red Deer Cave near the city of Mengzi in southwest China. They remained unstudied until 2008. The scientists are calling them the "Red Deer Cave People," because they cooked extinct red deer in their namesake cave. [Photos of the Red Deer Cave People]

"They clearly had a taste for venison, with evidence they cooked these large deer in the cave," Curnoe said.

Carbon dating, a technique that estimates the radioactive decay of carbon in samples of charcoal found with the fossils helped establish their age. The charcoal also showed they knew how to use fire. Stone artifacts found at the Maludong site also suggest they were toolmakers.

A Chinese geologist found a fourth partial skeleton, which looks very similar to the Maludong fossils, in a cave near the village of Longlin in southwest China in 1979 while prospecting the area for oil. It stayed encased in a block of rock neglected in the basement of an archaeological research institute until 2009, when the international team of scientists rediscovered the fossils.

"In 2009, when I was in China working with co-author Professor Ji Xueping, he showed me the block of rock that contained the skull," Curnoe recalled. "After picking my own jaw up from the floor, we decided we had to make the remains a priority of our research."

Jutting jaws and flaring cheeks

The Stone Age fossils are unusual mosaics of modern and archaic human anatomical features, as well as previously unseen characteristics. This makes them difficult to classify as either a new species or an unusual type of modern human.

For instance, the Red Deer Cave people had long, broad and tall frontal lobes like modern humans. These brain lobes are located immediately behind the forehead, and are linked with personality and behavior.

However, the Red Deer Cave people differ from modernHomo sapiens in their prominent brow ridges, thick skull bones, flat upper faces with a broad nose, jutting jaws that lack a humanlike chin, brains moderate in size by ice age human standards, large molar teeth, and primitively short parietal lobes ? brain lobes at the top of the head associated with sensory data. "These are primitive features seen in our ancestors hundreds of thousands of years ago," Curnoe said. [Learn About the Human Skeleton]

Unique features of the Red Deer Cave people seen neither in modern nor known archaic lineages of humans include a strongly curved forehead bone, very broad nose and eye sockets, and very flat cheeks that flare widely to the sides to make space for large chewing muscles. In addition, the place where the lower jaw forms a joint with the base of the skull is unusually wide and deep.

All in all, the Red Deer Cave people are the youngest population to be found anywhere in the world whose anatomy does not comfortably fit within the range of modern humans, whether they be modern humans from 150 or 150,000 years ago, the researchers noted.

"In short, they're anatomically unique among all members of the human evolutionary tree," Curnoe told LiveScience.

Mysterious population in Asia

The Red Deer Cave people lived in China at the end of the ice age. "They survived the final and one of the worst cold episodes, known as the Last Glacial Maximum, which ended around 20,000 years ago," Curnoe said.

"The period around 15,000 to 11,000 years ago when they thrived in southwest China is known as the Pleistocene-Holocene transition, and it saw a shift to climates and ecological communities the same as those of today," Curnoe added. "It also saw the demise of the megafaunain most places, including a giant deer that was exploited by the Red Deer Cave people and recovered in large numbers from the Maludong site."

"This time also saw a major shift in the behavior of modern humans in southern China, who began to make pottery for food storage and to gather wild rice ? this marks some of the first steps towards full-blown farming," Curnoe said. "The Red Deer Cave people were sharing the landscape with these early pre-farming communities, but we have no idea yet how they may have interacted or whether they competed for resources." [10 Things That?Make Humans Special]

Although modern-day Asia contains more than half of the world's population, researchers still know little about humans there after our ancestors settled Eurasia about 70,000 years ago, Curnoe said. No human fossils less than 100,000 years old had been found in mainland East Asia that resembled anything other than anatomically modern humans until now. These new findings are fossil evidence that this region may not have been devoid of our evolutionary cousins.

"The discovery of the Red Deer Cave People opens the next chapter in the latest stage of the human evolutionary story, the Asian chapter," Curnoe said. "It's a story that's just beginning to be told."

Defining a human

A key reason the scientists have not yet decided how to classify the Red Deer People scientifically has to do with one of the major ongoing questions for scientists investigating human evolution ? "the lack of a satisfactory biological definition of our own species, Homo sapiens," Curnoe said. "We still don't have one that most of us agree upon."

"I think the evidence is slightly weighted towards the Red Deer Cave people representing a new evolutionary line," Curnoe said. "First, their skulls are anatomically unique ? they look very different to all modern humans, whether alive today or in Africa 150,000 years ago. And second, the very fact they persisted until almost 11,000 years ago when we know that very modern-looking people lived at the same time immediately to the east and south suggests they must have been isolated from them. We might infer from this isolation that they either didn't interbreed or did so in a limited way."

Recent findings suggest that other, different evolutionary lines may have also lived in the region, such as the "hobbit" or Homo floresiensis on the island of Flores in Indonesia.

"This paints an amazing picture of diversity, one we had no clue about until this last decade," Curnoe said.

The Red Deer Cave people might possibly even be related to a mysterious branch of humanity known as the Denisovans only discovered in the past two years, whose DNA suggests they were neither like us nor Neanderthals.

"It is certainly possible that the Red Deer Cave people (represent) ?an interbreeding event between modern humans and some other population like the Denisovans," Curnoe said.

Ultimately, to see how closely or distantly related the Red Deer Cave people are to modern humans or even the Denisovans, the scientists want to extract and test DNA from the fossils. "We've had one attempt already, but without success," Curnoe said. "We'll just have to wait and see if we're successful in our future work."

The scientists detailed their findings online March 14 in the journal PLoS ONE.

Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience?and on Facebook.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/4YavHHEZ5xM/Possible-new-human-species-unearthed-in-China

kepler 22 b kepler 22 b rosie o donnell st nicholas st nicholas mindy mccready mindy mccready

Washington's fledgling health-insurance exchange moves ahead ...

OLYMPIA ? Washington state moved closer this week to opening its own online marketplace for consumers to shop for health insurance.

As a part of President Barack Obama's sweeping health-care reform law, states are mandated to adopt by 2014 state-run insurance marketplaces ? called exchanges ? or allow the federal government to run one for them.

Each exchange will include a range of coverage and price choices for individual and small-group health insurance plans.

Washington's exchange will essentially be a public-private partnership designed to give consumers an easy way to compare the benefits of various plans, said Richard Onizuka, the assistant director of the Health Care Policy Division of the state Health Care Authority. It will be developed and implemented by a board of nine officials from health agencies, the medical industry and other sectors appointed by Gov. Chris Gregoire and two non-voting members.

"The intent is that it will be one place for (consumers) to go," Onizuka said. "There are still a lot of operational things that need to be built."

Along with the website, the exchange will perform several functions. It will certify qualified health plans based on federal standards, provide information for consumers about their eligibility for Medicaid and other health programs, and operate a hotline for consumers. It will also run "navigator" programs, systems set up to inform people and assist them in purchasing the best health plan for them.

The exchange will offer several categories of plans. Platinum, the highest-coverage option, will pay for 90 percent of the costs to cover a list of benefits the government considers essential, such as emergency care. Bronze, a lower-coverage option, will pay for 60 percent of the costs. Silver and gold plans will fall between the two. The "essential benefits" covered in each plan include access to prescription drugs, mental health care, hospitalization and maternity care.

Under the new system, catastrophic plans will be offered solely inside the exchange. These plans are only available for low-income consumers age 30 or younger, and they offer a low coverage level.

States have the option to devise their own lists of "essential benefits." Starting Dec. 15 and continued for each following year, the Insurance Commissioner must turn in a list of state-mandated benefits to the Legislature.

Under the new system, insurance providers will be able to sell plans outside the exchange if they so choose. Concern recently arose at the Insurance Commissioner's Office over the possibility that providers would opt to offer cheaper plans outside the exchange without providing more expensive and options.

"There was a push to only offer bronze-level plans outside the market," said Stephanie Marquis, a spokeswoman for the Insurance Commissioner's Office. Doing so would allow providers to cover only the young and healthy as opposed to riskier consumers.

This was specifically addressed in a bill that passed the Legislature earlier this month to establish rules for the exchange, Marquis said. The rules ensured that carriers who offer bronze plans must also offer silver and gold plans.

"We are very pleased with the bill that passed, especially with the marketplace rules," she said. "We wanted a level playing field."

The insurance industry has shown a lukewarm reaction to the exchange. Some praise it as a reform that will usher more fairness and transparency into the insurance market. But Brian Berg, a member of the Life and Health Advisory for the Insurance Commissioner's Office and co-vice president and secretary of Floyd Watkins & Associates, a Vancouver insurance firm, joins many in his belief that the exchange will complicate the health-care system.

"The insurance companies are basically going to be in a situation in which they have to accept any kind of risk," he said. "From a premium standpoint and from a risk standpoint, it's going to do nothing but drive up rates."

Upwards of 30 million Americans are projected to use the new insurance exchanges. States are supposed to decide whether to run their own exchanges by the end of the year, but the Obama administration announced Monday that it would allow them to open their exchanges one year late.

-- Justin Runquist

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/03/washingtons_fledgling_health_i.html

international womens day manning new apple tv sun flare sean hannity solar flare love hewitt